Rampur Gold Smuggling Case Exposes Severe Unemployment Crisis Driving Youth To Deadly Risks

The incident follows a pattern of unemployed youth being recruited by international smuggling rings that exploit economic desperation.

UP State Bureau Updated: Monday, May 26, 2025, 07:55 AM IST
Pixabay

Pixabay

A shocking gold smuggling case in Rampur has laid bare the dire employment crisis pushing young workers to dangerous extremes. Four local youths, all from economically distressed backgrounds, resorted to swallowing gold capsules to smuggle them from Saudi Arabia - a lethal practice that claims numerous lives annually across smuggling routes.  
The incident follows a pattern of unemployed youth being recruited by international smuggling rings that exploit economic desperation.

Sources indicate these operations typically pay carriers just 5-10% of the ₹12-14 lakh saved per trip in avoided GST, while syndicate leaders pocket the majority.  Medical reports confirm the youths had ingested nearly 300 grams of gold worth `18 lakh, with nine 30-gram capsules already extracted at district hospitals.

Experts note each capsule carried lethal rupture risks. The case exposes multiple systemic failures:  
1) Porous airport security where standard scanners miss internally concealed metals  
2) Absence of rehabilitation programs for at-risk youth in high-unemployment districts  
3) Flawed GST policies that make legal gold import prohibitively expensive  
"This isn't crime - it's economic coercion," stated a senior police officer on condition of anonymity. "When the only 'employment offer' these youths get is between starvation and becoming a drug/gold mule, something has fundamentally failed."  

Rampur's 19.3% unemployment rate (CMIE 2024) far exceeds the national average, with the textile industry collapse eliminating 8,000 local jobs since 2020.

State skilling missions have reached less than 15% of the district's working-age population.  

While two handlers were arrested, activists question why anti-smuggling efforts focus on low-level carriers rather than the financiers who enjoy political protection. "Until livelihood alternatives exist, we're just treating symptoms," noted labor rights advocate Dr. Neha Verma.  

The case has reignited demands for urgent job creation initiatives and customs reforms. As the youths remain hospitalized for metal extraction, their predicament highlights how economic policies are literally gutting the state's next generation.

Published on: Monday, May 26, 2025, 07:55 AM IST

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